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Now reading: Chapter 81 - 75: Pressure From the South from The Exiled Duke's Lottery system, a Fantasy novel by LordsBank.

Rain covered the capital for three straight days.

Cold gray skies hung above House Valcriox while servants moved quietly through the manor halls, careful not to disturb the increasingly tense atmosphere surrounding the family council.

Because for the first ti in years—

The north had beco a problem.

Not a rebellious one.

Not yet.

Which sohow made it worse.

Kassian Valcriox stood beside the long council table while several senior mbers of the family reviewed Kael Draven’s report in grim silence.

No one interrupted.

Mostly because every page made the situation harder to ignore.

Industrial expansion. Modernized rifle regints. Mobile artillery.

And perhaps most dangerous—

Public loyalty.

An older council elder finally lowered the report sharply.

"This should have been stopped months ago."

Kassian’s expression remained calm.

"With what?"

"The crown."

"The crown barely understands what Elarion has beco."

That silenced the room briefly.

Because it was true.

Most southern nobles still imagined Lucien ruling a strengthened frontier fortress.

Not an industrializing territory.

Another elder frowned deeply.

"He is still a Valcriox."

"For now," another muttered quietly.

That line darkened the atmosphere imdiately.

Kassian noticed it.

But did not respond.

Because deep down—

He understood the concern.

Lucien had changed.

Or perhaps the north changed him.

Either way, Elarion no longer depended heavily on southern support.

And independence frightened noble houses more than rebellion.

Rebellion could be crushed.

Self-sufficiency was harder.

One council mber tapped Kael’s report irritably.

"These cannons concern less than the factories."

Several others looked surprised.

The old noble continued calmly:

"Magic artillery already exists."

"Yes," Kassian answered quietly.

"But only the great houses possess it."

"And Lucien’s weapons can be mass produced."

Exactly.

That was the true danger.

Industrialization itself.

If Elarion continued expanding at this speed, eventually the north would possess:

superior steel production,

superior weapons,

and an army trained around both.

A noble territory should not evolve faster than the kingdom controlling it.

Yet that was exactly what was happening.

Another elder suddenly spoke.

"Then recall him."

Kassian looked toward him.

"He will refuse."

"Then order him."

"He may still refuse."

Silence followed afterward.

Heavy silence.

Because nobody here truly knew what would happen if Lucien openly rejected House Valcriox.

And uncertainty made nobles nervous.

Very nervous.

Kassian slowly moved toward the northern map hanging across the chamber wall afterward.

"Direct confrontation now would be foolish."

"Then what do you suggest?"

Pressure.

Not military.

Not openly.

Not yet.

Kassian’s eyes narrowed slightly.

"We remind Elarion that it still depends on the south."

The council gradually quieted.

Now they were listening carefully.

Kassian began outlining the strategy calmly.

"Reduce steel shipnts."

One elder blinked.

"He produces steel already."

"Not enough high-quality southern alloy."

True.

Elarion’s industry expanded rapidly, but specialized materials still ca from southern trade networks.

Kassian continued:

"Slow rchant approvals."

"Trade restrictions?"

"Administrative delays."

A much cleaner political weapon.

Nothing openly hostile.

Just inconvenient.

Caravan permits delayed. Trade inspections increased. Supply routes "reorganized."

Enough pressure to slow industrial expansion without declaring direct hostility.

Another elder nodded slowly.

"That may force Lucien south for negotiations."

"Or force dependence again," soone added.

Kassian remained silent.

Because that was the real objective.

Not punishnt.

Control.

If Elarion beca completely independent economically, political authority would eventually follow.

And House Valcriox could not allow that.

Kael Draven stood near the far side of the chamber listening quietly throughout the discussion.

Finally he spoke.

"I advise caution."

Several council mbers frowned instantly.

One scoffed openly.

"You sound impressed by the north."

Kael t his gaze calmly.

"You would be too."

The room quieted slightly.

Kael rarely exaggerated.

Which made his warnings difficult to dismiss.

The elite knight continued:

"Lucien expected observation."

Kassian’s eyes shifted slightly.

"Yes."

"He may also expect pressure."

That possibility settled across the chamber heavily.

Because Lucien was not foolish.

If he intentionally revealed Elarion’s military capability, then he likely anticipated political reaction afterward.

One elder waved dismissively.

"What can he realistically do? Refuse trade?"

Kassian answered before Kael could.

"No."

Silence.

Then quietly:

"He can adapt."

That was what worried Kassian most.

Every obstacle thrown toward the north so far had sohow strengthened it instead.

Harsh winters? Lucien industrialized.

Isolation? He expanded trade.

Beast tides? He modernized the military.

Pressure alone might simply accelerate Elarion further.

Unfortunately doing nothing had beco impossible.

Kassian finally straightened afterward.

"Begin with rchants."

The council focused imdiately.

"Restrict northern access to specialized steel imports."

"Increase inspections on industrial equipnt shipnts."

"Monitor all trade moving toward Elarion."

asured pressure.

Enough to remind Lucien the south still possessed influence.

But not enough to justify military escalation.

At least—

That was the hope.

Hours later, the council slowly dispersed while rain continued falling across the capital outside.

Only Kael remained inside the chamber alongside Kassian.

The elite knight watched the northern territories on the map silently for several monts before finally speaking.

"You think this will work?"

Kassian answered honestly.

"No."

That surprised Kael slightly.

"Then why do it?"

Kassian stared toward Elarion’s marked territory quietly.

Because he already understood sothing terrifying.

Lucien was building montum.

Industrial montum. Military montum. Economic montum.

And montum beca harder to stop the longer it continued.

"This isn’t about stopping him anymore," Kassian said quietly.

Kael frowned slightly.

"Then what?"

Kassian’s gaze hardened.

"...It’s about seeing how he reacts to resistance."

That answer lingered heavily in the empty council chamber afterward.

Far north beyond the mountains, Elarion’s factories still burned through the night while steam rose endlessly into the cold sky.

And unknowingly—

The first true political conflict between north and south had finally begun.

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